-Caveat Lector-

If solar energy had been allowed to grow
instead of nuclear which seems to have a side effect of
producing poisonous fluoride.  NOW

used computer cases and parts could be sold like used
blue jeans.
powered by solar energy
receiving communications from satellite instead of phone line.

for those of you that make web pages
consider most of the rest of the world is using a operating system
Like Dos if they are not using Dos.
percentage wise they do not use windows or use
browses like Explorer.

When I had a counter on my other site and had only
sent the address to some overseas lists
Explorer was the browser with the fewest hits
Netscape was more popular
and the most hits came in for browses that the counter
could not recognize.
Except for One frame page and two table pages
which are getting ready to change -
My site is backward compatible, and capable of
being read by any browser, even one that some
programer in another country had just finished coding.

applets are pretty (for us) but consider others,
and do not use them on your whole site, please.
Piper

Das GOAT wrote:

>  -Caveat Lector-
>
>      "200 Americans have more money than 40 percent of the world's
> population."
>
>     "20% of the population, living in high income countries, control 86% of
> the world export markets, 68% of foreign investment and 74 percent of
> telephone lines.
>      "Rich countries or corporations have directed 80% of their foreign
> investments to only 20 nations in Eastern Europe and the developing world,
> mainly to China."
>
>      "The UN report suggests the rules of globalization need to be changed to
> make them work for people rather than profits, arguing against an unfettered
> market economy."
>
> Gap Between Rich, Poor Said Growing
>
> By NAOMI KOPPEL
> .c The Associated Press
>
> GENEVA (AP) - Technology advances may be improving life for many people
> around the world, but they are also widening the gap between rich and poor,
> according to a U.N. report released today.
>
> An international effort is needed to meet the needs of poor people in areas
> of medical research, communications and information technology, according to
> the 1999 Human Development Report.
>
> Researchers with the U.N. Development Program examined income, education,
> life expectancy and health care in assessing the quality of life in 174
> countries.
>
> Among their findings were that purchasing a computer would cost the average
> Bangladeshi eight years' income, while the average American would pay one
> month's wage.
>
> Eighty percent of all websites are in English, but only one person in ten
> worldwide speaks English, the report continued.
>
> Even in more established means of communications the researchers found a gap
> between rich and poor.
>
> In the principality of Monaco in 1996 there were 99 telephone lines per 100
> people, while in Cambodia the figure was one. People in Switzerland make an
> average of six hours of international telephone calls per year, but in
> Pakistan the average is one minute.
>
> ``This (technology) is a two-edged sword - it is cutting many people in, but
> it is increasingly cutting many people out,'' the report's author Richard
> Jolly told reporters.
>
> Jolly said people using the Internet were increasingly young, white, male and
> well-educated.
>
> The report also ranks the countries and territories in a human development
> index based on real income, life expectancy and educational standards.
>
> Canada tops the list for the sixth year running, followed by Norway and the
> United States. The bottom 22 countries on the list are all in Africa, with
> Sierra Leone coming last.
>
> The top 20 percent of the world's population earned 74 times as much as the
> bottom 20 percent. In 1960 it was 30 times as much.
>
> ``The 200 richest people in the world have more money than the combined
> income of the lowest 40 percent of the world's population,'' said Jolly.
>
> Globalization did not necessarily make the situation worse, but Jolly said
> governments should take into account more than just trade issues when they
> consider international policy.
>
> The report says international policy making must balance a concern for
> profits with a concern for people who have been affected by turmoil in the
> global marketplace.
>
> It is also important to find a comprehensive approach to global threats such
> as HIV infection, international crime, human rights abuses by multinational
> corporations and transnational pollution such as acid rain.
>
> ``The aim is to put human concerns at the center of the globalization debate,
> to focus on the global interdependence of people and not just of financial
> flows,'' added Jolly.
>
> UN: Internet helps create parallel societies
>
> By Evelyn Leopold
>
> UNITED NATIONS, July 12 (Reuters) - When leaders of an attempted coup against
> Soviet President Mikhail Gorbachev seized radio and television stations in
> 1991, Russians used a fledgling computer and facsimile network to disseminate
> calls for resistance to defeat the revolt.
>
> Within a few years, use of the Internet exploded, opening a fast track to
> knowledge and communications.  But fewer than 3 percent of Russians today
> have access to it, says the 1999 Human Development report, released by the
> U.N. Development Programme (UNDP) on Monday.
>
> And in Bangladesh, buying a computer would cost the average person more than
> eight years' income compared with just one month's wage for the average
> American.
>
> Some 88 percent of the world's Internet users -- 143 million in 1998 and a
> predicted 700 million in 2001 -- are in wealthy industrial nations with the
> United States having more computers than the rest of the world combined
>
> The current Internet user, for example, is male, 35 years old or younger,
> college-educated, English-speaking and more often than not a resident of the
> United States, where 26 percent of the population use the World Wide Web.
>
> The Internet, an example of the shrinking global village, at the same time
> shows up glaring inequalities in the world economy, with rich countries
> getting richer and new developments outpacing the ability of the poor nations
> to deal with them, the report said.
>
> ``Even as communications, transportation and technology are driving global
> economic expansion, headway on poverty is not keeping pace,'' said CNN
> founder Ted Turner in a contribution to the report.
>
> ``It is as if globalization is in fast-forward and the world's ability to
> understand and react to it is in slow motion,'' he said.
>
> Yet many use the Internet in developing nations, especially scientists,
> academics and governments, such as in India and Malaysia. India has also
> produces software for export.
>
> Telephones, a necessity, for connecting to the web, are uneven. Thailand has
> more cellular phones than the whole of Africa and Bulgaria has more Internet
> hosts than sub-Sahara Africa except for South Africa. In several African
> countries average monthly Internet connection and use costs run as high as
> $100 compared with $20 in the United States.
>
> And even in South Africa, the best-connected African country, about 75
> percent of the schools have no telephone.
>
> The Human Development Report for 10 years has searched for new ways to
> measure the lives of people, using a yardstick that goes beyond economic
> statistics -- such as who goes to school, who has clean water and who shares
> in economic benefits.
>
> This year's 260-page survey focuses on trends in ``globalization -- the
> growing integration of economies, culture and science around the world which
> has been spurred by an explosion in information and communications
> technology.
>
> It concludes that the rules of globalization need to be rewritten to make
> them work for people rather than profits, arguing against an unfettered
> market economy.
>
> ``The challenge is not to stop the expansion of global markets,'' the report
> said. ``The challenge ... is to preserve the advantage of global markets and
> competition but also to provide enough space for human, community and
> environmental resources to ensure that globalization works for people.''
>
> Since the 1980s many countries have benefited from globalization, among them
> Thailand, Malaysia, South Korea, Chile, the Dominican Republic, Mauritius and
> Poland, which have taken advantage of economic and technological
> opportunities.
>
> At the other end many countries reap few benefits, with Madagascar, Niger,
> Russia, Tajikistan and Venezuela among them.
>
> A fifth of the world's people living in high income countries control 86
> percent of the world export markets, 68 percent of foreign investment and 74
> percent of the telephone lines. Rich countries or corporations have directed
> 80 percent of their foreign investments to only 20 nations in Eastern Europe
> and the developing world, mainly to China.
>
> The result is a ``grotesque and dangerous polarisation'' between those
> benefiting from the system and those who are ``merely passive recipients of
> its effects,'' the report said.
>
> But the authors of the report argue that pernicious trends of market
> expansion are not inevitable.
>
> Among their suggestions are creating regional labour, environmental and
> social standards for multinational corporations rather than relying only on
> voluntary codes.
>
> Others include new sources of finance for technology, such as a ``bit tax''
> on Internet messages and independent legal aid to support weaker countries in
> the World Trade Organisation as well as debt relief for the poorest
> countries.
>
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DECLARATION & DISCLAIMER
==========
CTRL is a discussion and informational exchange list. Proselyzting propagandic
screeds are not allowed. Substance—not soapboxing!  These are sordid matters
and 'conspiracy theory', with its many half-truths, misdirections and outright
frauds is used politically  by different groups with major and minor effects
spread throughout the spectrum of time and thought. That being said, CTRL
gives no endorsement to the validity of posts, and always suggests to readers;
be wary of what you read. CTRL gives no credeence to Holocaust denial and
nazi's need not apply.

Let us please be civil and as always, Caveat Lector.
========================================================================
Archives Available at:
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